A Look at Great Britain’s Role in Building the Confederate Navy In 1860, the United States had the second largest merchant fleet in the world, and was well on the road to assume dominance. By the end of the Civil War, America barely had a merchant navy. This was the direct and indirec...
In Engines of Rebellion Saxton T. Bisbee surveys the history of Southern steam machinery across thos...
Prosecuting the Union Naval Blockade This book is the third installment of Robert Browning Jr.’s exh...
Lincoln and the Navy Commanding Lincoln’s Navy provides a broad examination of the Union Navy du...
This work addresses many persistent misconceptions of what the monitors were for, and why they faile...
Foreign Diplomacy and the War Against the Confederate Navy Although most Americans consider the Civ...
The resources of the Southern Confederacy were pitifully small at the outset of the Civil War, and t...
Diplomatic wrangling An international perspective At the time of his death, Frank J. Merli was pre...
Savannah sailors aboard the Standard Coastal Georgians relied on blockade runners\u27 success When...
The North came perilously close to forfeiting, at least temporarily, its ultimately decisive naval a...
During the Civil War, the Union Navy’s primary mission was to prevent the South from marketing her p...
War on the High Seas and Harbors An Overview of Naval Campaigns The Civil War may, as is often c...
War on the Mississippi In the growing body of literature on the naval aspects of the American Civil...
For its first eighty-five years, the United States was only a minor naval power. Its fledgling fleet...
The Anglo-Confederate mercantile house of Fraser, Trenholm and Company played an important, even vit...
On April 19, 1861, one week into the Civil War, President Lincoln announced his plan to blockade all...
In Engines of Rebellion Saxton T. Bisbee surveys the history of Southern steam machinery across thos...
Prosecuting the Union Naval Blockade This book is the third installment of Robert Browning Jr.’s exh...
Lincoln and the Navy Commanding Lincoln’s Navy provides a broad examination of the Union Navy du...
This work addresses many persistent misconceptions of what the monitors were for, and why they faile...
Foreign Diplomacy and the War Against the Confederate Navy Although most Americans consider the Civ...
The resources of the Southern Confederacy were pitifully small at the outset of the Civil War, and t...
Diplomatic wrangling An international perspective At the time of his death, Frank J. Merli was pre...
Savannah sailors aboard the Standard Coastal Georgians relied on blockade runners\u27 success When...
The North came perilously close to forfeiting, at least temporarily, its ultimately decisive naval a...
During the Civil War, the Union Navy’s primary mission was to prevent the South from marketing her p...
War on the High Seas and Harbors An Overview of Naval Campaigns The Civil War may, as is often c...
War on the Mississippi In the growing body of literature on the naval aspects of the American Civil...
For its first eighty-five years, the United States was only a minor naval power. Its fledgling fleet...
The Anglo-Confederate mercantile house of Fraser, Trenholm and Company played an important, even vit...
On April 19, 1861, one week into the Civil War, President Lincoln announced his plan to blockade all...
In Engines of Rebellion Saxton T. Bisbee surveys the history of Southern steam machinery across thos...
Prosecuting the Union Naval Blockade This book is the third installment of Robert Browning Jr.’s exh...
Lincoln and the Navy Commanding Lincoln’s Navy provides a broad examination of the Union Navy du...